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Lecture 10: PUBLIC PARTICIPATION AND PREFERENCE ELICITATION 1Landscape Preferences 2General Public Involvement 3Public perception testing
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LANDSCAPE PREFERENCES Directly measured from people/viewers Specific visual preferences (like/dislike) vs. general preferences (affected by visual and non-visual influences) Instinctive (inherent) vs. cultural/learned/familiar
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1.1INHERENT LANDSCAPE VALUES (INSTINCTIVE PREFERENCES)
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1.2SOCIO-CULTURAL LANDSCAPE VALUES/MEANINGS
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2GENERAL PUBLIC INVOLVEMENT Indicator 19 Forest management responds to a wide range of social values through effective planning processes that involve inclusive consultation with stakeholders (CANFOR SFM Framework)
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Questions? Is it easy to get good public participation (problems)?
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Common problems Hostility and conflict Unsatisfactory consultation/planning approaches: low levels of meaningful engagement and poor transparency of process Consultation often ignores less organized and less vocal groups Little effective learning on either side
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A hierarchy of public involvement processes Communicating to the public Listening to the public 2-way dialogue/decision-making
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Communicating to the public
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Listening to the public Social science research methods
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Respondents’ resource values in order of priority ( Arrow Forest District Survey) Water Maintaining sustained flow of water Maintaining or restoring fish populations to natural levels and fluctuations Maintaining natural levels of sedimentation Ecosystem Maintaining long-term soil fertility Protecting habitat for fish and the full range of native wildlife species Maintaining slope stability/preventing soil erosion Jobs Recreation Visual Quality Timber Safety
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Two-way dialogue and decision-making 1 Inclusive data gathering: –Early public/stakeholder scoping –Incorporate local knowledge 2 Collaborative public processes: –Iterative workshops/trust-building –Consideration of alternatives –Joint decision-making
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What makes a good process? An inclusive, open and accountable process A comprehensive, credible, scientifically supported process Assuring sustainability through learning
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A MENU OF PUBLIC PROCESSES/TECHNIQUES (Summarised from SFM Network KETE document) Public meetings Open houses Surveys Focus group meetings Round table negotiations Public advisory groups/committees Design workshops Etc.
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Hearing from the silent majority Example: Arrow Forest District Mail-Survey
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Public Advisory Groups Workable but…. Sometimes selective representation Agendas influenced by organizer's priorities (usually industry) Not necessarily systematic or structured input to decisions
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Stakeholder Analysis Documented process for systematic identification of : All affected stakeholders All responsible stakeholders/actors Interested stakeholders
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Stakeholders/Participants
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3PREFERENCE ELICITATION AND PERCEPTION TESTING More to public participation than preference elicitation (dialogue, decision-making, monitoring etc.)
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Respondents Response stimuli (medium/content) Response types: –Cognitive (knowing) –Affective (liking, feeling) –Evaluative (recommending) Perception testing variables
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Processes for public input to landscape assessment (VRM) - rare! USFS: Constituent analysis US Bureau of Land Management: Visual Sensitivity workshops BCMoF Open Houses for VLI Surveys on visual issues
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Public Input
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Eliciting the public’s landscape perceptions Direct viewer sensitivity/concern measurement Typical products: –Map of preferred areas/points/features –Selected or ranked photos of preferred scenes/conditions –Expressed preferences related to measurable/identified landscape characteristics or responses to photographs/visualizations
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Rural Oliver Special Places / Features 210 “photo” points selected
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Town of Oliver Out of Character Industry in Town Airport Southern Gateway –116 points selected
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Resident survey at workshops
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Community-based Photo-survey Results: Sample from Royston, Vancouver Island Fig. 2.1 Fig. 2.6 Prepared by: Cecilia Achiam
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Example: Preferences of First Nation community (Cheam Band) for stream restoration options Compatible/Incompatible (no. of comments): 0/12 8/5 66/0
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3PREFERENCE ELICITATION AND PERCEPTION TESTING More to public participation than preference elicitation (dialogue, decision-making, monitoring etc.) Perceptions versus preferences Different kinds of perceptions/preferences: –General perceptions/preferences –Aesthetic perceptions/preferences
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RECAP Public participation versus perception testing General perceptions/preferences versus visual perceptions/preferences One way versus 2-way processes Multiple methods (pros and cons)
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